The Arts & Crafts Movement espoused values of simplicity craftsmanship & beauty quite counter to Victorian & Edwardian industrialism. Though most famous for its architecture furniture & ornamental work between the 1890s & the 1930s the movement also produced gardens all over Britain whose designs redolent of a lost golden era had worldwide influence. These designs by luminaries such as Gertrude Jekyll & Sir Edwin Lutyens were engaging & romantic combinations of manor-house garden formalism & the naive charms of the cottage garden
- but from formally clipped topiary to rugged wild borders nothing was left to chance. Sarah Rutherford here explores the winding paths & meticulously shaped hedges the gazebos & gateways the formal terraces & the billowing border plantings that characterised the Arts & Crafts garden & directs readers & gardeners to where they can visit & be inspired by these beautiful works of art.